Why does my wireless keyboard and mouse only work some of the time?
Try moving the receiver so it has line of sight with the keyboard and mouse!
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who thought of arranging the characters in the keyboard?
I read an article about that, why are they placed like they are? When they started making key boards it was a manual type writer. If you punch two keys close together they got stuck. Which took time to get them apart. So by decipering the words so that it rarely happened this key board was established. Once everyone knew this to be the keyboard it had to stay the same. Changeing as we have seen can cause a huge diaster. ON a adding machine the 123 on the numerical keyboard is at the top. with the 789 on the bottom. People who were constantly adding things and did it at record time was use to that keyboard. When computers came along someone not knowing that made a computer with the 123 on the bottom. It was a diaster, some people just could not get it straight and it caused untold suffering and problems to business men. So when they mentioned it would be easier to put letters in a different spot. It caused an outrage! So the idea was scrapped. So we have what we have today.
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Why does my music stop if I use keyboard sounds?
Maybe you should specify your question. What is this u2018musicu2019; playing on your PC/tablet/phone/Youtube/straming/u2026.? What is this u2018use keyboard soundsu2019; is it your computer keyboard, the keyboard on your screen, a musical keyboard, on screen, on your desk, a MIDI-keyboard? Are we talking phone, PC, tablet, something else? Is there more than a keyboard involved, like a guitar, headphones? Do you use cables? Bluetooth? What is the situation this problem occurs in?Why does my music stop if I use keyboard sounds?
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are keyboard and piono the same thing? do they have any differences?
Yes, of course keyboards are smaller than pianos. Keyboards are electronic, because they are plugged in. But a major thing to note is that though the range of a piano is much larger because it has more keys (usually it can go higher and lower than a keyboard), the keyboard can give you different tones. Usually you can press a few buttons and voila, your keyboarding can sound like a church choir. Press a few more buttons, and you get a drum. My old keyboard from the late 90s even has fireworks, so any new keyboard should probably have cooler tones. Another major difference is that in most cases, a keyboard's keys are not as hard to play as a piano. With a piano, the strike of a key makes a hammer hit a string on the inside, which makes the sound. On a keyboard, one touch of the key simply registers an electronic pitch stored into the "computer" of the keyboard. I started piano on a keyboard, then graduated to an upright piano. For beginners, it is usually more cost-effective to buy a $50-$100 keyboard that can easily be donated or thrown away if the student chooses not to continue than to purchase a $10,000 beautiful baby grand piano that would be heart-wrenching to get rid of. If you plan on learning to play the piano, I recommend that you start with a keyboard first so you do not end up wasting precious money if you do not continue. Other than that, the keys are the same, and people do not have a problem transitioning from keyboard to piano or vice versa, aside from the weight of the keys. Good luck!
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Dvorak keyboard layout
Dvorak /dvrk/ (listen) is a keyboard layout for English patented in 1936 by August Dvorak and his brother-in-law, William Dealey as a faster and more ergonomic alternative to the QWERTY layout (the de facto standard keyboard layout). Dvorak proponents claim that it requires less finger motion and as a result reduces errors, increases typing speed, reduces repetitive strain injuries, or is simply more comfortable than QWERTY. Although Dvorak has failed to replace QWERTY, most major modern operating systems (such as Windows, macOS, Linux, Android, Chrome OS, and BSD) allow a user to switch to the Dvorak layout. iOS does not provide a system-wide, touchscreen Dvorak keyboard, although third-party software is capable of adding the layout to iOS, and the layout can be chosen for use with any hardware keyboard, regardless of printed layout. Several modifications were designed by the team directed by Dvorak or by ANSI. These variations have been collectively or individually termed the Dvorak Simplified Keyboard, the American Simplified Keyboard or simply the Simplified Keyboard, but they all have come to be known commonly as the Dvorak keyboard or Dvorak layout.